beer pot, unrecorded Zulu artist

Artwork Overview

beer pot, 1925–1990
Where object was made: South Africa
Material/technique: appliqué; ceramic
Dimensions:
Object Height/Diameter (Height x Diameter): 16.5 x 22 cm
Object Height/Diameter (Height x Diameter): 6 1/2 x 8 11/16 in
Credit line: Anonymous gift
Accession number: 2020.0121
On display: Stewart Gallery

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Images

Label texts

Exhibition Label: "Earthly Vessels: African Ceramics," Sep-2009, Nancy Mahaney Food for the Ancestors: After the harvest, Zulu women process sorghum or millet grain to make beer, using large vessels. The Zulu consider the beer to be the food of the ancestors. The women brew and store the beer in a sacred area at the back of the house called the umsamo, where the pots are left just slightly uncovered, so that the ancestors can taste the drink. Zulus share the beer at social events by passing it from person to person using the smaller beer pots. Beer is seen as a symbol of fertility, and the offering of beer to the ancestors is one way of thanking them for continuing the life cycle of the community through the women’s fertility.

Exhibitions

Cassandra Mesick Braun, curator
2022–2027
Nancy Mahaney, curator
2009–2010